Rick Warren's Saddleback Church Launching 3  Global Campuses in '12 Cities 
PEACE Plan' Movement
Hong Kong, Berlin, Buenos Aires First of International  'Gateway' Campuses 
to Launch in October

 
 
By _Nicola Menzie_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/nicola-menzie/)   , 
Christian Post Reporter
October 4,  2013

 
Saddleback Church, which has 10 campuses across Southern California, is  
undertaking for the very first time in its 33-year history the launch of  
campuses outside of the United States in an effort to "finish the Great  
Commission," according to founding Pastor Rick Warren. Warren and his 
megachurch  
will see fruits of their years-long work with the "12 Cities PEACE Plan" come 
to  bear this month with the launch of three global campuses, one each in 
Hong Kong,  Berlin and Buenos Aires. 
Saddleback Hong Kong is the first global congregation prepared for launch,  
and will officially open its doors this Sunday, Oct. 6. The following two  
Sundays will see Saddleback Berlin (Oct. 13) and Buenos Aires (Oct 20) 
follow  suit. Eventually, over the next few years, these Saddleback church 
plants 
will  be followed by sister congregations in Accra, Amman, Bangalore, 
Johannesburg,  London, Manila, Mexico City, Moscow, and Tokyo. 
"The ultimate goal is to finish the Great Commission by planting a body of  
Jesus (church), a Bible (portion of God's word) and a believer in the last  
unengaged people groups on Earth," Warren explained in a press release 
shared  with The Christian Post. "Jesus said one day in heaven there will be 
people from  every tribe and nation worshipping around God's throne. I intend 
to use all my  influence in rallying the Global Church to do what Jesus 
commanded us 2000 years  ago!" 
Warren's PEACE Plan agenda is to expose the world's remaining estimated 
3,000  unengaged people groups to the Gospel, strengthen local churches by 
providing  pastors with Purpose Driven training, and meet the practical needs 
of 
the poor  and marginalized in those cities. 
The targeted "unengaged" groups, according to the California megachurch,  
include those "who have had little or no exposure to the Bible, Christian  
churches or missionaries." 
"We want to model and establish healthy, loving church plants in these 
cities  to deliver the hope-filled Gospel message of Jesus Christ to people who 
have  never even heard His name," said Saddleback's PEACE Pastor Jimmie 
Davidson. "We  will be ministering to orphans, loving those affected with HIV 
and AIDS, serving  the poor and marginalized, and collaborating with other 
local churches and  organizations to provide wholistic community 
transformation." 
According to Davidson, Saddleback's global campuses, while headed by 
pastors  already linked to the local culture, will feature live worship and 
video 
or  satellite-feed messages from Warren, the senior pastor of each 
congregation. 
Saddleback Hong Kong 
PEACE Plan leaders will be looking especially to Saddleback Hong Kong, 
Buenos  Aires and Berlin to set the learning curve for future church plants 
around the  world. 
The local pastor heading up Saddleback Hong is Stephen Lee, who was born 
and  raised in the bustling city that is home to nearly 7.2 million people. 
Lee, the  former chairman and president of management and leadership 
development institute  Peter F. Drucker Academy in China and Hong Kong, also 
has 
worked for years with  Prison Fellowship as an international director. When he 
got the call early last  year to lead Saddleback Hong Kong, Lee said he 
hesitated for months, unsure if  he was qualified to lead in that capacity. "I 
never thought about 'pastor' and  'Stephen,' the two words coming together," 
Lee told CP via Skype last Friday  (Sept. 27). 
"After praying (over a period of) 48 hours, I replied to them 'nope,'" he  
said, noting that he actually replied a bit more politely. Lee said he just 
felt  unqualified and unprepared when he was first invited to consider the 
pastoral  position. 
However, Lee, whose relationship with Saddleback Church and Pastor Warren  
goes back several years, said "the inner voice from God calling" got louder 
and  louder as encouragement from California continued for him to step up to 
a new  kind of leadership role. 
As the call intensified and he felt he could not "escape" it, Lee said he  
prayed "diligently" for seven months and sought advice from friends and 
mentors  before finally committing to lead Saddleback Hong Kong. For the last 
several  months, he and Saddleback missionary teams have been engaged in 
developing the  nascent campus to become a "gateway" location, or a PEACE Plan 
base for  equipping other Christian ministers in Hong Kong and China. 
"We really want to position Saddleback Hong Kong as a local church that can 
 cater to and help the local people," said Lee, emphasizing that Saddleback 
Hong  Kong's focus will be on Chinese-speaking residents and doing 
outreach, although  English-language services are included. Describing 
Saddleback 
Hong Kong as a  "base camp," he added that the church would "support a lot of 
the small churches  in Hong Kong to run on the Purpose Driven way." The 
popular Purpose Driven  Church model, based on Warren's 1995 bestseller of the 
same name, emphasizes  evangelism, community outreach or service, and 
Christian discipleship. 
Lee, joined by his wife and their three children, have been working with  
Saddleback missionary teams to reach out to the Hong Kong community, 
primarily  focusing on the region surrounding Munsang College located in Hong 
Kong's 
 Kowloon City District. Saddleback Hong Kong's worship facility is located 
on the  school's campus. Lee said he and his team have already reached out 
to 6,000  people, and that he expects 500-800 visitors to attend the inaugu
ral service on  Oct. 6. 
"Hong Kong has 4 percent population that is Christian [and who attend  
church]," the pastor explained. "Not too many people go to church. It's only  
about 300,000 people attending church every week." So he hopes to reach the  
remaining 96 percent, which includes the estimated 80 percent who have 
dropped  out of church entirely. 
"We are not competing with local churches, no matter (if it is) English  
church or Chinese church," he added. "We really want to bring back the 16  
percent to help (them) reconnect to God, and also the 80 percent who have never 
 been in the church." 
According to the government's _annual Hong  Kong Yearbook_ 
(http://www.yearbook.gov.hk/2012/en/pdf/E18.pdf) , "the Christian community — 
comprising 
mainly Protestants and  Roman Catholics — numbers about 843,000 followers. In 
addition to Protestants  and Roman Catholics, the Greek, Russian and Coptic 
Orthodox Church all have  their presence in Hong Kong." Traditional faiths 
like Buddhism and Taoism have  the most adherents, an estimated one million 
each, and other religions, such as  Islam, Judaism and Hinduism, are also 
represented. 
Saddleback's efforts in Hong Kong so far have been embraced. Not counting 
the  Hong Kong campus' partnership with Munsang College, Lee shared that 
three local  evangelical churches have pledged to send volunteers to help with 
the inaugural  service on Oct. 6 and for another three months, which the 
pastor called "a  miracle" and "kingdom-minded." 
One potential setback, however, occurred last week when Pastor Warren 
posted  on Monday, Sept. 23 _an image _ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/eugenecho.com/2013/09/25/this-is-a-post-about-rick-warren-peoples-liberation-army-humili
ty-listening-and-cultural-sensitivity/) on his Facebook page of a cheerful 
and dutiful Red  Guard youth member with the caption: "The typical attitude 
of Saddleback Staff  as they start work each day," unaware of the propaganda 
image's tie to communist  China's brutally violent Cultural Revolution of 
the '60s and '70s. 
The image, since taken down after initially being defended as "a joke,"  
sparked _conversations and concerns_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/SaddlebackHongKong/posts/578925552143519)  about 
cultural sensitivity and  suggestions that 
Saddleback Hong Kong simply would be a Western church clone  desensitized 
to its actual local context, which is about 94 percent ethnic  Chinese.

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